LVMH Misses Expectations as China Flags

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This story has been updated.

PARIS — The Chinese dam has broken for LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton.

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The world’s biggest luxury group missed market expectations with a 4.4 percent drop in revenues in the third quarter, blaming lower growth in Japan and a “marked deterioration” in sales of clothing and accessories to Chinese nationals.

Overall sales in its key fashion and leather goods division were down 5 percent on a like-for-like basis versus the same period last year, sharply below a Visible Alpha consensus forecast for a 1 percent increase.

The sector leader’s struggles illustrated the depth of the crisis in confidence among Chinese consumers.

Their spending on fashion and leather goods was down in the midsingle digits in the third quarter, after rising in the mid- to high-single digits during the first half of the year, chief financial officer Jean-Jacques Guiony told analysts and journalists on a webcast on Tuesday.

Golden Week Not That Golden

Business in watches and jewelry remained under strain, but did not worsen. The country’s National Day Golden Week holiday, which ran from Oct. 1 to 7, did not move the needle either way, Guiony noted.

The French conglomerate, which owns more than 75 brands including Louis Vuitton, Dior, Tiffany & Co. and Sephora, is on a general cost-cutting drive, but it plans to continue investing in stores, communications and events in China next year in the belief that demand will eventually bounce back. “We don’t give up,” Guiony said.

“We are still very hopeful that the luxury industry will continue to develop and will continue to surf on the wave of the emergence of the upper middle class,” he added. “We see absolutely no reason why, after a cyclical downturn as we are experiencing today, we shall not be in a position to recover.”

The fortunes of luxury stocks have been closely tied to China’s announcements regarding economic stimulus measures designed to counter flagging growth linked to factors including a slumping property market and high youth unemployment.

The world’s second-largest economy is at risk of missing its target of around 5 percent growth in 2024, analysts say.

Guiony said recent announcements showed that Chinese authorities understand the need to spur household spending, though he would not speculate on the timing of a potential turnaround.